About

Caroline Davenport

“I did not inherit a path. I built one — with music, art, community, and the belief that the world could be more fair than it is."

I started without a roadmap, and without apology. What I had was a deep sense of fairness, a love of music, and the conviction that culture belongs to the people willing to show up for it.

In the 1990s, we founded Tasty Shows, a concert production company, and Neverstop, a creative agency — bringing some of the most vital artists and musicians of our generation to the Pacific Northwest, because this community deserved to be part of the conversation. We held space for emerging talent long before the world knew their names. The shows and the art were acts of faith.

Culture isn't handed down from on high. It lives in the spaces where people gather — in venues, in music, in work that makes you stop and feel something.

My practice also includes mediation and conflict resolution, work rooted in the same values that run through everything I do: fairness, listening, and the belief that resolution is always possible.

I only take on work I love.

Jared Lovejoy

You can find the formal CV on LinkedIn. The short version: I've spent my life working in the creative fields alongside all kinds of remarkable people, and I remain grateful, and occasionally amazed, that I get to keep doing it.

Since the mid 1990s, my work has been guided by an Integral approach — a practical framework for paying attention to mind, body, and spirit as they show up in self, culture, and nature. For over 30 years, I've applied this lens to everything I create, aiming to lead with heart, integrity, and a grounded sense of perspective.

I'm a multidisciplinary artist and an entrepreneur. I collaborate with people and organizations interested in building culture with intention, joy, style, and substance. Not just good optics.

We're living in a polarized moment, expertly engineered for outrage and distraction. Which makes real antidotes essential. My work has always focused on bringing people together in real life, creating shared experiences that remind us how much more we share than what divides us. Music and the arts do this better than almost anything else, and doing it in person has never mattered more.

The digital world should support lived experience, not replace it. Likes and followers aren't activism, and they haven't done much to improve the material world. Attention is powerful. Without intention, it's easily redirected. The system now favors friction over connection. I'm interested in platforms and practices that are non-extractive by design, and in work that reaches people who are open, flexible, and willing to pay attention to how they can affect the world positively — and take action on that.

As the internet continues to consolidate, the work returns to the physical world. To shared space. To presence. To showing up.

Change in culture is a collective act.